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Karol Antoniewicz : ウィキペディア英語版
Karol Antoniewicz

Karol Antoniewicz (Bołoz.) (アルメニア語:Կարոլ Անտոնեվիչ) (born in Lwów (now Lviv Ukraine), 6 November 1807; died 14 November 1852) was a Polish-Armenian Jesuit and missionary.
==Life==

He was the son of Joseph Antoniewicz, a nobleman and lawyer. His pious mother Josephine, née Nikorowicz, attended to his early training on their estate at Skwarzawa, where they had moved in 1818.
After the death of his father (1823), Karol entered the university at Lwów, to study law, devoting, however, much time to philology; hence besides Polish, he spoke fluent German, French, Italian, and English. Here he also gathered material for the history of the Armenians in Poland (his ancestors were Armenians) and wrote Polish and German poetry.
Having finished his course in law with the highest distinction (1827), he made a tour through Austria and Rumania. During the Polish insurrection of 1830-31, he served for some time under General Dwernicki.
In 1833 he married his cousin Sophia Nikorowicz, and settled in Skwarzawa. His marital life ended with the death of his five children, followed shortly by that of his wife, who took religious vows on her death-bed. His mother also died as a religious in the Benedictine Order. This, as well as the advice of his spiritual director, Father Frederic Rinn, S.J., induced him to seek admission into the novitiate of the Jesuits at Stara Wieś in September, 1839, where he took the solemn vows on 12 September 1841.
His philosophical studies were made at Tarnopol, where he was a colleague of the theologian Cardinal Franzelin. His theological studies he finished at Nowy Sącz. He was ordained priest on 10 October 1844, by Bishop Jan Marceli Gutkowski.
Upon the request of Count D'Este, Governor of Galicia, the Provincial (Father Pierling) appointed him missionary for the Sandec district, where crime and lawlessness (massacre of the nobility, 1846) reigned supreme. During seven months, Antoniewicz gave over twenty missions, preached over 200 sermons. His impaired health, however, compelled him to seek a mountainous climate in spring, 1847. Having recovered, he was assigned to St. Nicholas in Lwów, as preacher, and as confessor for students.
When on 7 May 1848, the Society of Jesus was dissolved in Austria, Antoniewicz went to Silesia (Graefenberg), returning incognito, however, to Lwów, in 1850. Being discovered, he left the country, stopping at Cracow, just after the conflagration of 18 July 1850, to console the inhabitants. On this occasion, he delivered the sermon "On the ruins of Cracow" (''Na zgliszczach Krakowa'').
At the insistence of Cardinal Diepenbrock he gave missions in Silesia; there he also founded a house in Nissa, and was appointed its first superior. Asked by Archbishop Leon Przyłuski, he extended his missionary activity to Posen (1852). He contracted cholera and died of it.
In the church at Obra, where he rests, his friends erected to his memory a monument, surmounted by his bust.

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